U S D C: Nited Tates Istrict Ourt
U S D C: Nited Tates Istrict Ourt
        I, a federal law enforcement officer or an attorney for the government, request a search warrant and state under
penalty of perjury that I have reason to believe that there is now concealed on the following person or property
located in the State and      District of Colorado and elsewhere (identify the person or describe property to be searched and give its location):
SEE “ATTACHMENT A”, which is attached to and incorporated in this Application and Affidavit
          The person or property to be searched, described above, is believed to conceal (identify the person or describe the
property to be seized):
SEE “ATTACHMENT B”, which is attached to and incorporated in this Application and Affidavit
          The basis for the search under Fed. R. Crim. P. 41(c) is (check one or more):
                     X evidence of a crime;
                          contraband, fruits of crime, or other items illegally possessed;
                     X property designed for use, intended for use, or used in committing a crime;
                          a person to be arrested or a person who is unlawfully restrained.
          The search is related to a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343 and 15 U.S.C. §§ 78(b) and 78ff(a) and the application is based on
          these facts:
          X Continued on the attached affidavit, which is incorporated by reference.
               Delayed notice of      days (give exact ending date if more than 30 days:                                         ) is requested
              under 18 U.S.C. § 3103a, the basis of which is set forth on the attached sheet.
                                                                                   s/ Kate E. Funk
                                                                                                              Applicant’s signature
Date: 28August
         Nov 2014
               25, 2012
                                                                                                              JJudge’s
                                                                                                                  g signature
                                                                                                                       g
                                   Attachment A
The email accounts listed below and information associated with the email accounts
known as (hereinafter and in Attachment B as "SUBJECT ACCOUNTS") that is in the
possession of or under the control of the Email Provider, GoDaddy.com LLC, whose
office is located at 14455 North Hayden Rd., Suite 219, Scottsdale, AZ 85260
(hereinafter and in Attachment B as "PROVIDER.")
    1.   william@williamjsears.com
    2.   wsears@vertifresh.com
    3.   admin@pharmpods.com
    4.   jscott@pharmpods.com
    5.   sdittman@fusionpharminc.com
    6.   craig@fusionpharminc.com
                                         48
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 3 of 52
Attachment B
I. SEARCH PROCEDURE
    A. The search warrant will be presented to personnel of the PROVIDER, who will be
       directed to isolate those accounts and files described in Section II below;
    C. The PROVIDER's employees will provide the exact duplicate in electronic form of
       the accounts and files described in Section II below and all information stored in
       those accounts and files to the agent who serves the search warrant; and
    D. Law enforcement personnel will thereafter review all information and records
       received from the PROVIDER's employees to determine the information to be
       seized by law enforcement personnel specified in Section III.
    A. For the SUBJECT ACCOUNTS listed in Attachment A from November 15, 2010
       to May 16, 2014, the PROVIDER shall disclose the following information, and the
       disclosure shall include all information even if deleted yet still available to the
       PROVIDER, and all information preserved pursuant to a request under 18 U.S.C.
       § 2703(f):
       1.     The contents of all emails and attachments associated with the SUBJECT
              ACCOUNTS, including deleted, stored, or preserved (pursuant to 18
              U.S.C. § 2703(f) or otherwise) emails sent to and from the account, draft
              emails, existing printouts of any such emails, the source and destination
              addresses associated with each email, the date and time at which each
              email was sent, and the size and length of each email;
    A. The following items from those described above in Section II related to,
       evidencing or concerning (a) the formation, ownership, control and/or operations
       of FusionPharm, Inc., Meadpoint Venture Partners, LLC, VertiFresh, LLC,
       Bayside Realty Holdings, LLC, and Microcap Management, LLC (hereinafter,
       collectively, the “Enumerated Entities”); and (b) the scheme and activities which
       are described and are the subject of the affidavit in support of this warrant (which
       affidavit is incorporated by reference herein), which items constitute evidence
       and/or instrumentalities of violations of Title 18, United States Code, Section
       1343 (wire fraud) and Title 15 United States Codes, Section 78j(b) and 78ff(a),
       excluding, however, any items constituting privileged attorney-client
       communications :
       1. All electronic mail, attachments and related computer files relating to the
            foregoing subjects.
                                             50
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 5 of 52
V. PROVIDER PROCEDURES
    A. The PROVIDER shall deliver the information set forth above within 14 days of the
       service of this warrant and the PROVIDER shall send the information via
       facsimile, United States mail, UPS, or Federal Express and where maintained in
       electronic form, on CD-ROM or an equivalent electronic medium, to:
Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 2703(g) the presence of an agent is not required for service or
execution of this warrant.
VI. DEFINITIONS
    A. As used above, the terms “records” and “information” include all of the foregoing
       items of evidence in whatever form and by whatever means they may have been
       created or stored.
                                             51
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 6 of 52
        2.    At all times during the investigation described in this affidavit, I have been
acting in my official capacity as a Special Agent with the FBI. I have conducted
interviews, collected and reviewed documents, and obtained information from numerous
sources throughout my investigation. As detailed at length herein, my investigation,
which is ongoing, has revealed that there is a fair probability that evidence of a
microcap fraud scheme will be found in certain email accounts listed below.
          a.   william@williamjsears.com
          b.   wsears@vertifresh.com
          c.   admin@pharmpods.com
          d.   jscott@pharmpods.com
          e.   sdittman@fusionpharminc.com
          f.   craig@fusionpharminc.com
       4.      The FBI, with the assistance of the Internal Revenue Service’s Criminal
Investigation Division (“IRS-CID”), is investigating whether Scott Dittman (“Dittman”),
President, CEO and co-founder of FusionPharm, Inc. (“FusionPharm”) and William
Sears (“Sears”), Dittman’s brother-in-law and co-founder and control person of
FusionPharm, orchestrated an offering fraud and “pump and dump” microcap stock
scheme. Your affiant’s investigation is assessing whether various suspected federal
criminal offenses occurred, including wire fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. §1343 and
securities fraud in violation of 15 U.S.C. §§78(b) and 78ff(a), and 17 C.F.R. §240.10b-5.
      5.      The facts set forth in this affidavit are based upon my personal
observations, my review of documents discussed herein, my training and experience,
information from witnesses, and information and analyses obtained from other law
enforcement agencies, including the United States Securities and Exchange
Commission (“SEC”). This affidavit is intended for the limited purpose to show that
                                             1
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 7 of 52
there is probable cause for the requested search warrant and does not purport to set
forth all of my knowledge of, or investigation into this matter.
1
  In a reverse merger transaction, an existing public “shell company,” which is a public reporting company
with few or no operations, acquires a private operating company—usually one that is seeking access to
funding in the U.S. capital markets. Typically, the shareholders of the private operating company ex-
change their shares for a large majority of the shares of the public company. Although the public shell
company survives the merger, the private operating company’s shareholders gain a controlling interest in
the voting power and outstanding shares of stock of the public shell company. The SEC’s Office of
Investor Education and Advocacy has issued an investor bulletin in the past warning about the risks of
investing in companies that have been involved in recent reverse mergers. (See
http://www.sec.gov/investor/alerts/reversemergers.pdf)
                                                                   2
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 8 of 52
Denver, Colorado. The SEC had been investigating a possible offering fraud and
pump-and-dump scheme being orchestrated by Dittman and Sears through
FusionPharm, a publicly traded microcap company.2
       10.    The SEC conducted preliminary investigative work, which included: (a)
reviewing FusionPharm’s publicly available financial disclosures between June 2011
and September 2013; (b) reviewing publicly available information concerning
FusionPharm, Dittman, Sears, and the companies purportedly owned, operated and/or
controlled by Dittman or Sears; and (c) interviewing CW-1. The SEC suspected that
FusionPharm may have been fabricating revenues involving possible sham transactions
with companies owned, operated and/or controlled by Dittman and Sears, and
misrepresenting revenues to the public.
       11.    The SEC referred the matter to the FBI on December 9, 2013. Pursuant
to an access request dated December 13, 2013, the SEC provided your affiant with
records it had obtained as part of its investigation, which include: (a) financial records
(including bank account statements, checks, deposits, incoming wire information)
2
 A microcap company is a company with market capitalization of less than $250 - $300 million. See
www.sec.gov/investor/pubs/microcapstock.htm.
3
  CW-1 initially filed the complaint on a voluntary basis, and was subsequently debriefed as part of
parallel investigations conducted by the SEC’s Denver Regional Office and federal criminal law
enforcement authorities including the FBI. After voluntarily providing this information, CW-1 refiled his
initial complaint to claim status as a “Whistleblower”, as defined in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (“Dodd-Frank”) [15 U.S.C. § 78u]. CW-1’s status as a Whistleblower means
that CW-1 receives certain identity disclosure protections and provides CW-1 with a right to a potential
monetary reward in the event that the information CW-1 voluntarily provided lead to a successful SEC
enforcement action resulting in monetary sanctions exceeding $1,000,000.00.
4
  Although not a primary focus of my investigation, CW-1 noted that the PharmPods did not perform as
the company claimed through its advertisements, press releases and its website. Your affiant spoke with
multiple customers, many of whom complained about various deficiencies in the product compared to the
representations made by Dittman and Sears. One of Dittman’s and Sears’ biggest claims was the
product was “plug and play,” and that all any purchaser would need to do is plug the PharmPod in and
one could start growing in compliance with local government ordinances. This was false, and according
to CW-1, Dittman and Sears knew this was false when they made the representations.
                                                               3
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 9 of 52
       13.     Your affiant thereafter reviewed and has been reviewing the SEC
Produced Records on an ongoing basis. Additionally, your affiant was made privy to
SEC analyses of the Bank Records, Brokerage Records and Transfer Agent Records
(collectively “SEC Analyses”) and has reviewed the same on an ongoing basis.
Furthermore, the FBI and IRS-CID have acquired additional bank records as we have
discovered additional accounts and transactions, and your affiant has been reviewing
these records on an ongoing basis.
        14.   In addition to my review of the records set forth in ¶11, your affiant has
interviewed several current and former FusionPharm employees. On February 17,
2014, CW-1 voluntarily sat for a joint proffer session with your affiant and
representatives from the SEC, IRS-CID, and United States Attorney’s Office (“USAO”)
at the USAO offices in Denver, CO. CW-1 has an undergraduate degree in Philosophy
and is a former FusionPharm employee. (See ¶9 above). CW-1 met Dittman in
approximately 2009 or 2010 through CW-1’s medical marijuana business, Rocky
Mountain Organics. CW-1 sat for a second voluntary joint proffer session on February
28, 2014 with your affiant and representatives from the SEC, IRS-CID, and USAO at the
USAO offices. On March 12, 2014, your affiant and IRS-CID Special Agent Ronald
Loecker had a follow up meeting with CW-1, at which time CW-1 voluntarily provided
your affiant and IRS-CID Special Agent Loecker with e-mail and phone text message
communications between CW-1, and Dittman and Sears. Your affiant reviewed these
e-mail and phone text message communications after receipt from CW-1.
                                            4
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 10 of 52
         15.   As part of your affiant’s discussions with CW-1, CW-1 identified a former
 FusionPharm employee, Cooperating Witness 2 (hereinafter referred to as “CW-2”).
 Prior to working for FusionPharm, CW-2 worked for Dittman at his prior medical
 marijuana company, Mountain High Wellness. Thereafter, CW-2 worked for Dittman
 and Sears at FusionPharm from its inception in 2011 through June 2013. CW-2 has an
 undergraduate degree in Accounting and is pursuing a master’s degree in Agriculture.
 CW-2 was responsible for many tasks at FusionPharm, including writing checks,
 reconciling bank statements and entering transaction data in Quickbooks software. On
 March 5, 2014, your affiant and IRS-CID Special Agent Loecker interviewed CW-2.
        17.    On May 16, 2014, the FBI and IRS-CID executed a federal search warrant
 on Subject Premises. The FBI seized 24 items of evidence including six computers and
 one tablet. The FBI also executed seizure warrants on four bank accounts and one
 brokerage account containing illegal proceeds from the sale of FusionPharm stock. The
 bank account seizure returns totaled approximately $269,616. The brokerage account
 return was for approximately $8,462,621. Also on May 16, 2014, the SEC suspended
 trading of FusionPharm’s common stock.
         18.     On May 16, 2014, shortly after the search warrant was executed, your
 affiant briefly interviewed a FusionPharm contractor, Cooperating Witness 3 (hereinafter
 referred to as “CW-3”). CW-3 held a CPA in Colorado from approximately 1993 through
 2004 and worked in the accounting and auditing field from 1991 through 2013, including
 over ten years with Arthur Anderson, LLP. CW-3 was a friend of Dittman’s from college
 and they maintained a personal friendship after college. CW-3 started working for
 FusionPharm on March 4, 2014 in a part-time contractor capacity, primarily to assist in
 the preparation of the company’s 2013 and 2014 financial statements and disclosures.
 On July 8, 2014, CW-3 voluntarily sat for a joint proffer session with your affiant, and
 representatives from the SEC, IRS-CID, United States Postal Inspection Service
 (“USPIS”), and the USAO at the USAO offices in Denver, Colorado. CW-3 sat for a
 second voluntary joint proffer session on July 29, 2014 with your affiant, and
 representatives from the SEC, IRS-CID, USPIS, and the USAO at the USAO offices in
 Denver, Colorado.
        21.    Dittman, age 45, is the President and CEO of FusionPharm. He is also a
 Director for Greeneway Wellness Foundation, a private medical marijuana company
 located in Massachusetts. Dittman was formerly a business consultant for Arthur
 Anderson, LLP from 1991 through 1995. Dittman also held a California CPA license
 from 1995 to 1997.
        22.     Sears, age 48, owns, operates and controls numerous companies that
 have purported business dealings with FusionPharm. Sears is also married to
 Dittman’s sister. Sears has been involved in a number of suspicious microcap stock
 transactions over the last decade. Additionally, Sears has been arrested on multiple
 occasions, including a 2004 arrest related to a fraudulent stock promotion scam which
 resulted in his 2007 conviction (via guilty plea) in the Southern District of New York
 (Case No. 04-cr-556-swk) to one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and
 commercial bribery, and one count of securities fraud.
        23.    As detailed herein and according to CW-1, CW-2 and CW-3, Sears ran
 and controlled FusionPharm along with Dittman. Sears was the person responsible for
 acquiring the company that ultimately became FusionPharm (see ¶25 below).
 According to CW-1, CW-2, and CW-3, and based on your affiant’s review of the SEC
 Produced Records, Sears worked at FusionPharm from inception, often handling day-
 to-day responsibilities reserved for an officer of the company. From the time of
 FusionPharm’s inception, Sears (a) handled and managed incoming investor checks
 and paperwork; (b) often corresponded with FusionPharm’s transfer agent in connection
 with FusionPharm common stock transactions; (c) provided credit cards and company
 funds to FusionPharm employees when they needed to make business purchases; (d)
 
 5
  Based on your affiant’s review of records provided to the SEC from the United States Patent and
 Trademark Office (USPTO), FusionPharm did file an application for a provisional patent on PharmPods
 on December 3, 2011. However, as of February 12, 2014, FusionPharm’s provisional patent has expired
 and thus FusionPharm does not have an application for a patent pending with the USPTO for
 PharmPods. FusionPharm may have filed an international patent outside of the USPTO but your affiant
 has not reviewed any of these records.
                                                                6
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 12 of 52
 wrote payroll checks for FusionPharm employees, including many checks that came
 from bank accounts in the name of the entities he controlled; and (e) made pitches to a
 number of investors on FusionPharm’s behalf, including a pitch to UC-1. Furthermore,
 as detailed below, Sears held millions of shares of FusionPharm’s common stock
 through entities he controlled. Moreover, the most telling evidence of Sears’
 clandestine control of FusionPharm comes from Sears himself. During UC-1’s visit to
 the FusionPharm warehouse on May 14, 2014, when Sears was asked if he was the
 guy who runs the show, he responded that he was the “hand up Mona Lisa’s skirt.”
        25.    Based on your affiant’s review of the FINRA Records, Sears acquired
 Baby Bee Bright in 2010 from Baby Bee Bright’s CEO, Frederick Dahlman, Jr., without
 paying any cash for the company.6 Dittman told FINRA that Dahlman retained 15,000
 shares of preferred stock as consideration for the transaction. Based on your affiant’s
 review of the FINRA Records, Dittman was appointed President and Director of Baby
 Bee Bright on November 15, 2010. Additionally, Sandra L. Sears, Sears’ mother
 (hereinafter “Mrs. Sears”), was appointed Treasurer & Secretary and Director on the
 same date.
         26.    Based on your affiant’s review of the Transfer Agent Records, on January
 25, 2011, Dahlman transferred 1,300,000 preferred shares of Baby Bee Bright’s stock to
 Salt Investments, LLC, a single person LLC owned, operated and controlled by Dittman.
 Dahlman retained the other 200,000 preferred shares until March 16, 2011 when he
 transferred 185,000 of his remaining preferred shares to Microcap Management, LLC
 (“Microcap”), an LLC owned, operated and controlled by Sears. Consistent with your
 affiant’s review of the Transfer Agent Records detailed above, Dahlman retained 15,000
 shares of FusionPharm preferred stock. (See ¶25 above). Your affiant does not have
 
 6
  In a January 2014 interview with iCannabis radio, Dittman also admitted Sears’ involvement in the
 acquisition of Baby Bee Bright: “My brother-in-law who’s kinda from the public markets background
 suggested that I should put this thing into a public entity for fundraising reasons. And, you know, good,
 bad or indifferent, back then, we did so, and we, you know, we bought an existing entity and merged our
 assets in there…” (emphasis added)
                                                                7
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 13 of 52
 any evidence that Dittman or Sears paid any money or offered any consideration for the
 shares.
         27.   After gaining control of the company and acquiring millions of shares of
 preferred stock, Dittman and Sears engineered a 1:200 reverse stock split of the
 company’s common stock.7 Before the reverse stock split, the company’s common
 stock was trading at $.10/share. After the reverse stock split, the stock price
 immediately jumped to trading at or above $1/share.8 Importantly, Dittman and Sears
 collectively owned nearly 1.5 million shares of FusionPharm preferred stock at this
 point, which could be converted to common stock at any time at a conversion rate of
 100 shares of common stock in exchange for 1 share of preferred stock. (See ¶26
 above). Based on my review of FusionPharm’s publicly traded stock information, the
 reverse stock split caused the price of the company’s common stock to increase 10-fold,
 meaning that Dittman and Sears effectively increased the value of their holdings by a
 multiple of 10.9
        28.    Baby Bee Bright was previously traded on the over-the-counter (“OTC”)
 market via OTC Link operated by OTC Markets Group Inc. (“OTC Link”) under the
 symbol BBYB.10 On March 25, 2011, Baby Bee Bright filed an Issuer Company-
 Related Action Notification Form with FINRA. This form certified to FINRA notification
 of a corporate action change request in compliance with FINRA Rule 6490, specifically
 
 7
   A reverse stock split occurs when a company decreases the number of company stock shares that are
 available. Given the reduction in number of shares outstanding, there is generally a corresponding
 increase in the stock price.
 8
     Stock prices obtained from www.bloomberg.com.
 9
   The easiest way to explain this is through a comparative example. If an investor owned 2,000,000
 shares of common stock with a stock price of $.05/share, she would own $100,000 worth of the stock. If
 there was a 1:200 reverse stock split, she would then own 2,000,000/200 = 10,000 shares of stock. But
 theoretically, the price of the stock would increase 200x to $.05*200 = $10/share. Therefore, she would
 still own 10,000 * $10/share = $100,000 of stock. But if she owned 20,000 preferred shares, convertible
 to common stock at 100 common shares/1 preferred share, the difference is clear. Prior to the reverse
 stock split, the equivalent value of her common stock shares would be the same as the owner of
 2,000,000 common stock shares: 20,000 preferred stock shares * 100 common stock shares at
 conversion * $.05/share = $100,000. After the reverse stock split, the individual still owns 20,000
 preferred shares, and can still convert them at 100 common stock shares per 1 preferred share.
 However, the price of the common stock has theoretically increased 20x to $10/share. The holder of the
 preferred shares now owns stock valued at 20,000 preferred shares * 100 common stock shares *
 $10/share = $20,000,000, or a 200-fold increase. In the case of FusionPharm’s reverse split, the price
 only increased by 10 fold, instead of 200. This can be due to a multitude of reasons including the stock
 supply, demand, or the fact that FusionPharm was considered a “penny stock”. According to the SEC, a
 “penny stock” generally refers to a security issued by a very small company that trades at less than
 $5/share. Penny stocks typically trade on the OTC market.
 10
    In the OTC Market, trading is not done via an exchange but rather directly between two parties. OTC
 trading in stocks is generally carried out using inter-dealer quotation services such as OTC Link and the
 OTC Bulletin Board (operated by FINRA).
                                                                8
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 14 of 52
 that Baby Bee Bright was changing its name to FusionPharm and its OTC Link stock
 symbol to FSPM. The form was signed by Dittman, and Sears was listed as the Baby
 Bee Bright “Administrative Officer.”
         29.   After Baby Bee Bright became FusionPharm, the Baby Bee Bright stock
 shares were automatically converted to FusionPharm stock shares. FusionPharm’s
 stock continued to be publicly traded via OTC Link. OTC Link has different “market
 tiers” for companies, which indicate the level of financial and corporate disclosure
 provided by the companies using the quotation system. The three tiers are: (a)
 OTCQX; (b) OTCQB; and (c) OTC Pink. FusionPharm was part of the OTC Pink tier up
 until the SEC trading suspension on May 16, 2014.
        30.    Within OTC Pink, companies are further categorized based on the level
 and timeliness of the information they provide to investors. FusionPharm was classified
 on the OTC Pink Limited tier from April 2011 until July 2013. According to the OTC
 Markets website, the OTC Pink Limited tier is often reserved for companies that have
 financial reporting problems, are in economic distress or are in bankruptcy.
         31.    Starting in July 2013, FusionPharm became part of the OTC Pink Current
 Information category, which required FusionPharm to do the following: (a) prepare
 financial reports in accordance with the U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
 (“GAAP”); (b) finalize quarterly and annual reports in a timely fashion (within 45 days
 after the end of a quarter); and (c) if the financial reports are not audited by an audit firm
 registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, upload an Attorney
 Letter within 120 days of the end of the fiscal year wherein the attorney represents,
 among other things, that he or she has examined corporate records and other
 documents, and that the information included in the filing is accurate and current.
        32.    FusionPharm’s stock resumed trading on the “Grey Market” after the
 SEC’s trading suspension expired on May 30, 2014. According to the OTC Markets
 website, a security traded on the Grey Market is “a security that is not currently traded
 on the OTCQX, OTCQB, or OTC Pink marketplaces. Broker-dealers are not willing or
 able to publicly quote OTC securities because of a lack of investor interest, company
 information availability or regulatory compliance.”
        33.     As of August 11, 2014, FusionPharm had posted its balance sheets,
 income statements, cash flow statements, and related notes to its financial disclosures
 (collectively “Financial Disclosures”) on the OTC market website from 2011 through
 March 31, 2014. According to an employee at OTC Markets Group, Inc., financial
 statements are provided by electronic means through a portal on the website
 www.otciq.com. The electronic transmission is routed through New Jersey and then
 stored in Virginia. These disclosures are available to the investing public via
 www.otcmarkets.com. Based on your affiant’s review of FusionPharm’s press releases,
 FusionPharm makes references to these Financial Disclosures in its press releases.
                                               9
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 15 of 52
         37.    FusionPharm used the media detailed in ¶¶34-36 to tout its past and
 present financial performance while enticing the public with news of future deals.
 FusionPharm claimed to make approximately $1,934,811 in revenue from 2011 through
 the first quarter of 2014. As set forth below, a large portion of this claimed revenue was
 fabricated, falsified and/or misleading. At no point in the 2011-2014 time period did
 FusionPharm ever disclose that the bulk of its claimed revenues were fabricated
 through phony sales between FusionPharm and entities owned, operated or controlled
 by Sears and Dittman. FusionPharm also never disclosed to investors that Sears –
 convicted of a securities fraud scam in the past – was acting as an undisclosed control
 person for FusionPharm.
                                           SEARS’ NETWORK OF AFFILIATED ENTITIES
        38.    As noted above in ¶23, according to CW-1, CW-2 and CW-3, Sears ran
 and controlled FusionPharm along with Dittman. Based on your affiant’s investigation,
 Sears did this in at least two ways: (a) through his direct participation in FusionPharm’s
 day-to-day business (see ¶23 above); and (b) through a number of entities he owned,
 operated and controlled (collectively the “Sears Controlled Entities”).11
 
 11
   As noted above, CW-1 claimed that Dittman and Sears jointly controlled these entities. See, e.g., ¶9.
 According to CW-2, Dittman and Sears coordinated to utilize the Sears Controlled Entities as an integral
                                                                10
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 16 of 52
        39.      Based on your affiant’s review of the SEC Produced Records and publicly
 available information, Sears controlled the entities identified below. Specifically: (a) as
 detailed herein, Sears had an active role in managing the Sears Controlled Entities; (b)
 Sears controlled their bank and brokerage accounts, as he was a signor on each of the
 bank accounts and the primary signatory on checks and deposits in these accounts12;
 and (c) all of the addresses for the Sears Controlled Entities are connected to
 FusionPharm’s warehouse or Sears’ personal addresses. This control is manifest and
 evident with respect to each of the specific entities, as follows:
 
 part of the overall scheme. Moreover, given the circumstantial evidence cited herein and other documents
 your affiant has reviewed during the course of my investigation, Dittman collaborated with Sears on
 utilizing these entities for their respective personal benefits. However, based on your affiant’s review of
 the SEC Produced Records and publicly available information, Dittman was not identified in the
 organizing documents for these entities or listed a signor on the bank accounts. Accordingly, for ease of
 reference only, your affiant has referred to these entities as the Sears Controlled Entities.
 12
   Based on your affiant’s review of the Bank Records and statements from CW-1, Sears paid CW-1 with
 checks drawn from various Sears Controlled Entities during the course of CW-1’s employment with
 FusionPharm. This is one of many examples detailed herein of the incestuous relationship between
 Dittman, Sears, FusionPharm and the Sears Controlled Entities.
                                                                                              11
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 17 of 52
 
 13
  Mrs.SearsalsoopenedupotheraccountsforSears.AswiththeBaysideaccounts,SearswouldcontactMrs.
 SearswithinstructionsonwhenandwheretotransfermoneyfromthoseaccountstoaccountsSearscontrolled.
                                                                12
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 18 of 52
                       b. Sears paid FusionPharm employees with checks drawn from the Sears
                          Controlled Entities’ bank accounts.
                       c. Sears paid over $40,000 for shipping containers that went to FusionPharm
                          with checks drawn from the Microcap and Meadpoint bank accounts.
                       d. As detailed more herein, Dittman and Sears used the Sears Controlled
                          Entities to engage in an unlawful distribution of FusionPharm stock.
                                                                14
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 20 of 52
                       c. CW-3 stated that FusionPharm was not enforcing the promissory notes as
                          evidenced by both promissory notes running past their due date without a
                          documented extension agreement. When CW-3 notified Dittman in 2014,
                          FusionPharm drafted extension agreements. In April 2014, Sears signed
                          both extension agreements for Bayside and Meadpoint. Importantly, when
                          Sears signed the Bayside note extension, he asked CW-3 for a different
                          color pen and signed Mrs. Sears’ name.
     MISREPRESENTING SALES REVENUE AND FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE IN 2011
 
 18
   This $15,000 deposit was provided as supporting documentation for both the Meadpoint and Bayside
 loans. See ¶41(b).
 
                                                                            15
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 21 of 52
       45.   Mile High Green Cross (“MHGC”) signed a Business Equipment Lease
 dated January 23, 2012 for the lease of 8 PharmPods for $227,415.68. The agreement
 was not between MHGC and FusionPharm, but rather between MHGC and Meadpoint.
 
 20
   FusionPharm also claimed that “the organic foods industry” was “the primary focus of the Company’s
 Pharm[P]ods strategy…” and touted its Collaboration Agreement with Circle Fresh Farms and a
 partnership with Veterans to Farmers as 2011 business deals. FusionPharm did not do any business in
 the organic foods industry in 2011. Based on, among other things, your affiant’s review of the SEC
 Produced Records and SEC Analyses, FusionPharm did not generate any revenue in 2011 from: (a)
 Circle Fresh Farms directly; or (b) any organics food industry business.
                                                                             16
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 22 of 52
 According to the lease agreement, MHGC was to pay Meadpoint $20,000 on January
 23, 2012, and then make monthly rent payments of $8,642.32 starting in May 2012
 through the term of the lease ending on April 30, 2014.
       46.     According to owners of MHGC, their lease was signed and executed
 when the PharmPods were delivered in January 2012. By FusionPharm’s own stated
 revenue recognition standards (see ¶44 above), they should not have recognized any
 revenue until 2012 at the earliest.
                                                         Use of Meadpoint to Manipulate Revenues
        47.    During the execution of the search warrant (see ¶18 above), agents
 seized a computer that stored a QuickBooks file that contained accounting and
 transaction information for FusionPharm between 2011 and 2014 (hereinafter referred
 to as “FusionPharm Quickbooks”). The file contained revenue transactions that exactly
 matched FusionPharm financial statements posted on the OTC market for 2011, 2013
 and 2014, and nearly matched the claimed 2012 revenue.21
                                                                        17
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 23 of 52
 based on the explicit terms of the Distribution Agreement, FusionPharm could not have
 recognized more than 85% of the amount of the lease as revenue at any point during
 the 2011-2014 period, or .85*$227,415.68 = $193,303.33. This error alone overstates
 the revenue from this transaction by 15%.
                       b. A description of the transactions for each of the periods for which income
                          statements are presented, and such other information deemed necessary
                          to an understanding of the effects of the transactions on the financial
                          statements; and
                       c. The dollar amounts of transactions for each of the periods for which
                          income statements are presented; and
        51.           In turn, related parties are defined in Section 850-10-20 to include the
               following:
 
 23
   The Accounting Standards Codification is the current single source of United States Generally
 Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP).
 24
    The Codification defines affiliate as a party that, directly or indirectly through one or more
 intermediaries, controls, is controlled by, or is common control with an entity.
                                                                     18
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 24 of 52
        53.    Based on your affiant’s investigation, Sears should have been disclosed
 as a Related Party in 2011 in accordance with GAAP because Meadpoint had a
 material transaction with FusionPharm, and he was (a) managing and/or controlling the
 day-to-day operations at FusionPharm; (b) he had beneficial ownership of more than
 5% of outstanding shares of FusionPharm; and (c) he was Dittman’s brother-in-law.
                                                                19
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 25 of 52
                 “None of the following parties has, during the past two fiscal years, had
                 any material interest, direct or indirect, in any transaction with us or in any
                 presently proposed transaction that has or will materially affect us, other
                 than as noted in this section:”
Even though Sears satisfied each of these criteria, he was not disclosed.
 
 26
    FusionPharm reported 2,156,781 shares of common stock outstanding on December 31, 2011 with
 Bayside owning 210,000 of those shares. While FusionPharm disclosed Bayside’s holdings of the
 210,000 shares, they never state that Sears is the controller of Bayside.
 
 27
    FusionPharm’s transfer agent requested supporting payment information in connection with the
 Meadpoint note to verify that Meadpoint actually funded the note. Two of the transactions categorized as
 revenue in ¶55 were classified by Dittman as Meadpoint payments in connection with the note discussed
 in ¶41 above.
                                                    20
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 26 of 52
          58.   Most or all of the 2011 payments from Bayside to FusionPharm can be
 likely traced back to sales of FusionPharm common stock. Bayside received
 approximately $287,071 in deposits and incoming wires in 2011. Of that amount,
 approximately 89% of the incoming funds came from Microcap. The remaining deposits
 were a $25,000 deposit from Mrs. Sears, $5,500 in cash and $450 from Enterprise.
          63.   For the 2012 fiscal year, FusionPharm QuickBooks entries provide a
 breakdown of the VertiFresh revenue of $750,000 as follows: $270,000 for licensing and
 $480,000 for PharmPod sales (12 PharmPods at $40,000 each) dated January 3, 2012.
 However, similar to 2011, FusionPharm claimed that “revenue is recognized on the sale
 of a product when the product is shipped, which is when the risk of loss transfers to our
 customers, and collection of the sale is reasonably assured.” (emphasis added). The
 fact that there were at least eight PharmPods associated with the Boston and New York
 territories makes it clear that FusionPharm should not have recognized all of the
 revenue associated with these territories in 2012. In fact, your affiant has not found any
 
 30
     When CW-3 reviewed the VertiFresh licensing agreement, he discovered the agreement was never
 finalized or signed and did not include a time period, which is included in typical licensing agreements
 31
    In total, VertiFresh was obligated to purchase the following number of PharmPods between 2012 and
 2014: (a) 2012 – 4 PharmPods; (b) 2013 – 9 PharmPods; (c) 2014 – 14 PharmPods.
 
                                                                22
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 28 of 52
 evidence that VertiFresh received any PharmPods in connection with the License
 Agreement.32
        64.    Furthermore, your affiant has not uncovered any evidence of what exactly
 VertiFresh was purportedly “licensing.” Based on your affiant’s review of VertiFresh’s
 Bank Records and the SEC Analyses thereof, VertiFresh sold $2,086.00 worth of
 produce to third parties in 2012. Yet, VertiFresh purportedly paid $250,000 to use the
 pods for the right to earn this revenue.
                Restatement of 2012 Annual Revenues Continue to Misrepresent 2012 Revenue
       65.    After CW-3 started working for FusionPharm in 2013, he reviewed the
 License Agreement. CW-3 did not know why Dittman recognized $750,000 in revenue
 in 2012 since there is not any accounting principle that would justify this recognition.
 CW-3 suggested a restatement be included in the 2013 annual report. Dittman agreed.
       66.   On April 15, 2014, more than a year after issuing its 2012 Annual Report,
 FusionPharm restated its 2012 annual revenue. The restatement reversed $500,000 of
 2012 revenue. The newly stated revenue with the reversal was $308,398, and
 FusionPharm’s prior claimed net income of $265,213 was adjusted to a net loss of
 $234,787. The restatement explanation provided was as follows:
               In connection with the finalization of our 2013 financial statements, we
               restated our 2012 financial statements to reverse $500,000 of the
               $750,000 in revenue that was recognized during 2012 for the previously
               reported exclusive licensing arrangement with VertiFresh LLC
               (“VertiFresh”) for the use of PharmPods growing technologies for
               agricultural products. The restatement was based on reevaluating the
               arrangement with VertiFresh which required $250,000 be paid during 2012
               for the licensing of the Colorado territory (on a nonrefundable basis), and
               the remaining $500,000 to be due in equal installments of $250,000 during
               2013 and 2014 for the rights to two additional territories. The initial
               $250,000 was paid during 2012 and was reflected as earned revenue. The
               remaining $500,000 was set up as an accounts receivable and was
               reflected as earned revenue in error under US GAAP as the formal
               agreement was never finalized to account that the amounts due were for
               future territories and therefore unearned during 2012 and collection of this
               amount was never reasonably assured given the startup nature of
               VertiFresh. No further payments are anticipated. This restatement
               impacted our March 31, 2013 accounts receivable and accumulated deficit
               balances for the $500,000 referenced above. (emphasis added)
 
 32 According to CW-2, there were a maximum of three to four PharmPods in the FusionPharm
 warehouse being used for lettuce operations at any time. CW-2 was maintaining the PharmPods and, as
 referenced in ¶15, CW-2 was a FusionPharm employee, therefore illustrating that these PharmPods were
 still owned and operated by FusionPharm, and not part of the VertiFresh License Agreement.
                                                                23
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 29 of 52
         67.   CW-3 did not have an issue with the remaining $250,000 continuing to be
 reflected as revenue in 2012 because Dittman told him that this was paid for by
 VertiFresh in 2012.
        68.    However, based on your affiant’s review of the Bank Records and the
 SEC Analyses thereof, the restated revenue remains misleading. VertiFresh
 contributed at most approximately $147,000 to FusionPharm in 2012. Even assuming
 the transaction was legitimate and arms-length, an unlikely assumption given the facts
 detailed herein, $147,000 is the most revenue that FusionPharm could have recognized
 from VertiFresh in 2012.33
                                                        Failure to Disclose Sears as a Related Party
        69.   As in 2011, FusionPharm was required to report Sears as a related party
 for two reasons: (a) based on its representation that its financial statements were
 prepared in accordance with GAAP (See ¶50-¶51 for required disclosure requirements
 for compliance with GAAP); and (b) based on its own disclosures under Item XI.D of its
 2012 Annual Report, which included the same sections as the 2011 report detailed in
 ¶54 above.
         70.   According to CW-2, Sears was still controlling FusionPharm and acting in
 a capacity akin to an undisclosed officer and control person in 2012. Moreover, Sears
 is Dittman’s brother-in-law and had a material interest in the VertiFresh licensing
 agreement.34
 
 33
    Furthermore, similar to 2011, there is strong likelihood that the proceeds transferred by VertiFresh were
 originally from sales of FusionPharm’s common stock. Approximately 75% of the deposits into
 VertiFresh’s account in 2012 were from Microcap and Bayside. Similar to 2011, Microcap received more
 than 85% of its incoming proceeds from its brokerage accounts, which were solely used to buy and sell
 FusionPharm stock at this time. Again, similar to 2011, Bayside’s account was funded primarily (more
 than 80%) from Microcap transfers. Based on your affiant’s investigation to date, there is a strong
 likelihood that the 2012 VertiFresh transfers claimed as revenue by FusionPharm were proceeds derived
 from Microcap’s sales of FusionPharm stock on the open market, and re-circulating portions of those
 proceeds to the other Sears Controlled Entities.
 34
    While Sears’ ownership of FusionPharm common stock did not exceed 5% as of December 31, 2012,
 Bayside converted $1,400 of the note into 140,000 shares on January 18, 2013, shortly after the reporting
 period of the 2012 Annual Report. In addition, Sears owned 64,500 shares of FusionPharm stock
 through Microcap. There were 3,001,650 shares outstanding on January 18, 2013 with Sears owning
 over 5% of the outstanding shares 18 days after the end of the 2012 reporting period. The transfer was
 likely timed to shield Sears from disclosure. Also, Robert Dittman retained his 176,504 preferred shares,
 or 11.82%, which was likely controlled by Sears.
                                                                         24
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 30 of 52
                                             25
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 31 of 52
        76.    During CW-3’s July 8, 2014 and July 29, 2014 proffers, CW-3 stated that
 he was responsible for preparing FusionPharm’s 2013 financial statements and financial
 disclosures. CW-3 attempted to obtain supporting documentation for the various 2013
 transactions classified as revenue. Ultimately, CW-3 did not receive much supporting
 documentation. According to CW-3, Dittman represented to him that there were third
 parties purchasing the PharmPods from Meadpoint and, based on these
 representations, CW-3 recognized all the revenue as claimed by Dittman. However,
 this was not the case.
       77.     As in 2011 and 2012, Dittman utilized the Sears Controlled Entities as the
 primary – if not sole - source for claimed revenues. Your affiant reviewed FusionPharm
 Quickbooks for fiscal year 2013 and found the following entries comprising the
 $594,397 in revenue: (a) January 29, 2013 - Meadpoint for “Pods built on site”:
 $277,785.90 (Invoice #52015); (b) March 12, 2013 - Meadpoint for “Return of
 Overpayment”: $1,100; 35 (c) May 15, 2013 – Meadpoint: $120,000 (Invoice #52013); (d)
 August 13, 2013 – Meadpoint:$56,000 (Invoice #52022); (e) September 6, 2013 -
 Meadpoint for “Pods Shipped” (Invoice #52018): $89,500; (f) December 4, 2013 -
 Meadpoint “Deposit”: $15,000; (g) December 31, 2013: Fees Collected in Advance:
 $37,200. There are numerous issues with these claimed revenues.
                                                                         26
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 32 of 52
 assured.” It is not clear how FusionPharm could purport to recognize revenue for
 “deposits” ($15,000) or “fees collected in advance” ($37,200) when it specifically
 disclaimed in Note 9 to its 2013 Annual Report that customer deposits were not
 recognized as revenue in 2013. As a result, $52,200 of these revenues should not have
 been recognized.
         84.    CW-11 told your affiant that FusionPharm’s business model in 2013 was
 focused on two primary revenue sources: (a) selling PharmPods in the marijuana
 industry; and (b) growing and selling marijuana with Groundswell. In FusionPharm’s
 2013 Annual Report, there is no mention that FusionPharm was cultivating marijuana or
 receiving any proceeds from the sale of marijuana. In fact, during a January 2014
 interview with iCannabis Radio, Dittman specifically stated that the company was not
 involved in this business.
        86.     CW-4 said that he did not remit payments to FusionPharm, but rather to a
 different entity that Sears and Dittman created, VF Management, Inc. (“VF
 Management”). According to CW-4, Dittman created VF Management for the marijuana
 operation revenue payments. A review of incorporation documents show that VF
 Management’s principal office address was FusionPharm’s office space located at 4360
 Vine Street in Denver with Mrs. Sears listed as the registered agent.
       88.     Based on your affiant’s investigation to date, FusionPharm was using the
 same PharmPods to grow marijuana for Groundswell that Groundswell purportedly
 purchased in 2014, creating further doubts about a legitimate, arms-length revenue
 generating transaction.
                                             28
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 34 of 52
        90.   First, on May 17, 2013 Meadpoint purportedly sold 5 PharmPods to John
 Scott. Scott worked for Meadpoint around this time, and is quoted on behalf of
 Meadpoint in multiple press releases. According to Scott, the contract was for
 $115,000. After the “sale,” Scott leased the PharmPods to Local Products, a medical
 marijuana dispensary. However, based on your affiant’s review of the FusionPharm
 Quickbooks, on May 15, 2013 (two days before the date of the agreement),
 FusionPharm recognized $120,000.00 as revenue from this transaction. (FusionPharm
 Quickbooks Invoice #52013). Even if a transaction whereby FusionPharm sold the
 PharmPods to a Meadpoint employee could be a basis to recognize revenue, the most
 FusionPharm could recognize from this transaction would have been 85%*$115,000 =
 $97,750.
        92.     These two transactions are particularly important since they are, based on
 your affiant’s investigation to date, the only transactions in 2013 where PharmPods
 ultimately reached arms-length, third-party customers. Yet, these potentially legitimate
 transactions alone still overstated FusionPharm’s total 2013 reported revenue of
 $594,397 by, at a minimum, more than 5%.
                                                        Failure to Disclose Sears as a Related Party
        93.   As detailed in ¶54 above, FusionPharm previously included a separate
 disclosure section for “Disclosure of Family Relationships” and “Related Party
 Transactions.” In its 2013 Annual Report, FusionPharm did not include a similar
 section. However, based on your affiant’s investigation, Sears remained a related party
 and was required to be disclosed under GAAP. (See ¶¶50-51 above).
 
 37
      TheanalysisincludedinthesectioncanbeappliedtotheGroundswellPharmPodsdiscussedin¶82above.
                                                                         29
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 35 of 52
        96.     During this time period, Dittman knew that he had to shield Sears’
 involvement in FusionPharm from investors. Dittman made statements to UC-1 during
 their July 18, 2014 meeting, where Dittman claimed that “[t]he reason Billy has never
 been in FusionPharm is because Billy has a felony in his background.” Dittman later
 said during the same meeting, “[t]here would be no company if it wasn't for Bill, I just
 couldn't have him in the company”.
                 Specific Misrepresentations about FusionPharm’s Past and Future Performance
        97.   Beyond misrepresenting sales revenue in the Financial Disclosures,
 Dittman and Sears made multiple misrepresentations to investors through press
 releases. For example, on July 29, 2013, Meadpoint issued a press release that
 appeared on the FusionPharm web page. A representative from Meadpoint – Scott
 (see ¶90 above) - claimed that “we are optimistic that we will reach our annual sales
 goal of 100 PharmPods by the end of the year.” CW-1 stated that selling 100
 PharmPods in 2013 was “ridiculous” and not even close to the actual figures.
        98.     On August 20, 2013, Meadpoint issued a PRNewswire press release that
 Groundswell made an 11 unit purchase. This is misleading for numerous reasons.
 According to CW-4, Groundswell never discussed purchasing 11 PharmPods. In fact,
 according to CW-4, the only possible order around this time by Groundswell was for
 less than half of the claimed amount in the press release.38 Your affiant has found
 specific evidence that the misrepresentation in the August 20, 2013 press release
 increased potential investor interest in the company. For example, one website –
 www.aimhighprofits.com – relied on the purported 11 unit order as a basis for possibly
 investing in the company. Specifically, the website released an article titled
 “FusionPharm Stock Could Easily Go Viral on the OTC,” in which it made the following
 
 38
   In addition, the article quotes CW-4 as saying, “Nowhere else but with PharmPods can you an 88 light
 facility up and running in less than two weeks. It’s truly amazing!” CW-4 was not aware of this press
 release and did not provide the quote. In August 2013, CW-4 did not know how long it would take to get
 a PharmPod up and running.
                                                                30
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 36 of 52
 statement: “The deal in which Groundswell will incorporate the Company’s PharmPod
 system with the additional 11 unit purchase suddenly makes FSPM stock worth
 watching…”
        100. Finally, according to CW-1, Dittman and Sears used the marijuana grow
 operation that CW-1 was hired to grow as another opportunity to mislead investors that
 toured FusionPharm’s warehouse. Since the grow operation did not produce any
 revenue until 2013 following the agreement with Groundswell, CW-1 repeatedly
 attempted to devise ways to improve efficiencies and reduce costs. According to CW-1,
 Dittman and Sears would repeatedly tell him that it did not matter if it was profitable
 because “it’s just there to look nice for investors.” This didn’t make sense to him as he
 was under the impression he was hired to build a profitable marijuana grow operation.
 Sears Controlled Entities, Sears and Dittman had to misrepresent Sears’s role in the
 company to FusionPharm’s transfer agent and attorney.
           c. Rule 144 under the Securities Act (“Rule 144”) provides certain
              requirements for resellers to avoid being classified as an underwriter.
              These rules vary on whether or not an individual is classified as an
              affiliate.
           f. Concerning the volume limitations, an affiliate must limit its sales during a
              three month period to the greatest of the following: (a) one percent of the
              outstanding securities of the class being sold; (b) the average weekly
                                             32
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 38 of 52
              trading volume during the four calendar weeks preceding the date of sale,
              order or Form 144 notice; or (c) the average weekly trading volume of the
              class of the securities.
       104. Sears satisfies the criteria of an affiliate based on the information detailed
 throughout this affidavit, as well as the following facts:
                                             33
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 39 of 52
         106. Sears did not register his common stock sales with the SEC. As a result,
 based on my discussions with SEC attorneys, he would have needed to satisfy some
 exemption or safe harbor from registration, most notably the Rule 144 safe harbor.
 Dittman and Sears misrepresented Sears’s status as an affiliate, meaning that
 FusionPharm’s transfer agent and attorneys never analyzed potential compliance with
 the affiliate requirements under Rule 144.
         107. Based on the facts detailed herein, Sears failed to comply with those
 requirements. First, Sears – through Microcap, Bayside and Meadpoint – sold millions
 of shares of the company’s stock. (See ¶114 below for details). Based on your
 affiant’s review of the Transfer Agent Records and Brokerage Records, on numerous
 occasions between 2011 and 2013, Sears sold exponentially more than one percent of
 FusionPharm’s outstanding class of securities during a three-month period.
 Additionally, Sears never filed a Form 144 with the SEC concerning such sales.
 
                                                     34
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 40 of 52
        109. After Baby Bee Bright became FusionPharm, Dittman and Sears
 supported the company’s stock price by generating much of the early activity. However,
 since that time, numerous investors unaffiliated with FusionPharm have purchased the
 stock.
         110.    Based on your affiant’s review of the Transfer Agent Records and
 publicly available trading volume information, the Sears Controlled Entities accounted
 for a large portion of FusionPharm’s daily trading volume in 2011. Based on your
 affiant’s review of the SEC’s Analyses of Microcap’s brokerage account at
 Oppenheimer, Microcap sold 489,500 shares of FusionPharm common stock in 2011.
 Based on your affiant’s review of FusionPharm’s publicly available trading history on
 otcmarkets.com, there were only 1,048,823 shares of FusionPharm common stock
 transacted in during 2011. As a result, Microcap accounted for nearly 47% of
 FusionPharm’s total 2011 trade volume. During this time period, FusionPharm’s stock
 price traded between $.90/share and $3.15/share.
        111. In 2012, once again, based on your affiant’s review of the SEC’s Analyses
 of Microcap’s brokerage account at Oppenheimer and Scottsdale, Microcap sold
 approximately 245,500 shares of FusionPharm. Based on your affiant’s review of
 FusionPharm’s publicly available trading history on otcmarkets.com, there were only
 724,539 shares of FusionPharm common stock transacted in during 2012. As a result,
 Microcap accounted for more than 33% of FusionPharm’s total 2012 volume. The
 company’s stock price traded above $2/share for large portions of 2012, trading
 between $.60/share - $2.43/share.
         112. In 2013, based on your affiant’s review of the SEC’s Analyses of the
 Meadpoint and Bayside brokerage records, Sears traded in at least 1,064,355 shares of
 FusionPharm in his Bayside and Meadpoint brokerage accounts. Based on your
 affiant’s review of FusionPharm’s publicly available trading history on otcmarkets.com,
 there were 5,222,458 shares traded in FusionPharm’s common stock in 2013. As a
 result, Bayside and Meadpoint accounted for at least 20% of the total 2013 volume.
 During this time, the company’s stock price traded between $.08/share and $1.04/share.
                                            35
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 41 of 52
 Dittman owns 2,000,000 common stock shares and approximately 800,000 other shares
 are publicly declared to be either owned by insiders or restricted shares, hundreds of
 unaffiliated investors have purchased and currently own FusionPharm stock. Based on
 your affiant’s review of the Transfer Agent Records, the vast majority of these
 transactions have taken place via OTC Link in the secondary market, i.e., market where
 investors purchase securities or assets from other investors, rather than directly from
 FusionPharm.
         114. Given that Dittman had to disclose his stock transactions, Sears was able
 to sell millions of shares for their mutual benefit through the Sears Controlled Entities
 by: (a) selling shares of FusionPharm’s common stock; and (b) selling portions of the
 Bayside and Meadpoint promissory notes. Based on your affiant’s review of the Blue
 Sheet Data, Brokerage Records, Bank Records, and SEC’s Analyses regarding the
 same, the following chart sets forth the sizeable profits the Sears Controlled Entities
 earned by selling FusionPharm’s stock between April 2011 and May 2014.
 Bayside            Feb. 2013             Bayside sold its promissory note for $250,000
                                          to five investors.
                                             36
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 42 of 52
         116. Even though the transactions above were done solely through the Sears
 Controlled Entities, Dittman received hundreds of thousands of dollars of these
 proceeds. First, based on your affiant’s review of Dittman’s personal bank accounts
 records, Dittman received over $100,000 in checks and transfers from Meadpoint in his
 personal account between February 2014 and April 2014: (a) February 2014: $25,000
 check from Meadpoint; (b) March 2014: $20,000 check from Meadpoint; and (c) April
 2014: $70,000 transfer from Meadpoint. As set forth in Exhibit A and based on your
 affiant’s review of the Brokerage Records, the time period of the deposits coincides with
 the period when Meadpoint was converting most of its shares from the promissory note
 and selling shares on the open market.
       118. A review of Bank Records revealed these funds went to an account held
 by Paragon Abstract, a title company in Pennsylvania. Records were obtained from
 Paragon Abstract which confirmed the funds were used by Dittman for the purchase of
 a home located at 194 Basket Road, Oley, PA 19547.
                                            37
 
Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 43 of 52
        119. Analysis of the bank accounts for the Sears Controlled Entities showed
 that Dittman and his wife received large checks from these entities in 2011 through
 2014 totaling $186,530.
         121. An integral part of the execution of this fraudulent scheme involved the
 use of interstate transmission of wire communications. As set forth above, since 2011,
 FusionPharm’s financial statements and disclosure documents have been periodically
 uploaded to the OTC market website in a way that would have necessarily implicated
 and involved internet communications routed through New Jersey and Virginia (see ¶33
 above). Further, the news releases seen by your affiant from FusionPharm, Meadpoint
 and VertiFresh -- which conveyed, among other things, false and misleading
 information about purported FusionPharm sales -- were all disseminated and
 rebroadcast by commercial news services (such as PR Newswire) over the internet and
 so were necessarily transmitted and accessed through interstate and foreign
 communication facilities. Each of these periodic postings and news release
 disseminations thus constituted specific acts in execution of a wire fraud scheme in
 violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343.
 deceptive devices in connection with the purchase and sale of securities, and, among
 other things, make it unlawful to employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud, or to
 make untrue statements of material facts or to make omissions of material facts in
 connection with such sales and purchases. Willful violations of these statutory and
 regulatory provisions constitute federal felony offenses.
       a.      william@williamjsears.com
       b.      wsears@vertifresh.com
       c.      admin@pharmpods.com
       d.      jscott@pharmpods.com
       e.      sdittman@fusionpharminc.com
       f.      craig@fusionpharminc.com
        125. Per records provided by GoDaddy on March 17, 2014, the active domains
 www.fusionpharminc.com and www.pharmpods.com were set up by Sears. The above
 active email accounts were also maintained by GoDaddy under the same account. On
 April 17, 2014, I submitted a preservation request for the above listed e-mail accounts to
 GoDaddy via fax number (480) 624-2546. The request identified the following records
 to preserve:
            b. All records and other information relating to the accounts and any
               associated accounts including the following:
        126. A request to extend the preservation letter for an additional 90 days was
 sent by fax on July 10, 2014 and again on October 6, 2014. GoDaddy responded on
 August 27, 2014 and October 7, 2014 via e-mail that they received the requests and
 would preserve the account data for 90 days from October 7, 2014.
         127. As part of the investigation described herein, your affiant learned that each
 of these email accounts was used by Dittman or others at FusionPharm as part of the
 company’s operation or by Sears, in connection with his operation of Sears’ Controlled
 Entities and his involvement with FusionPharm. Your affiant further has reason to
 believe that these email accounts were used to engage in communications that involved
 the conduct discussed above in this affidavit. Your affiant learned about the existence
 and use of the email accounts, through various means, including the following: During
 the search warrant executed on May 16, 2014, agents seized a number of computers.
 Images of two of the computers were loaded into a forensic tool for review. During your
 affiant’s cursory review of these two computer images, your affiant saw that there were
 emails to or from each of the foregoing email accounts and that the communications
 involved the operations of FusionPharm and the matters addressed herein. Your affiant
 saw, for example, that:
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Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 46 of 52
        130. Finally, several of the Subject Email accounts were used by Dittman and
 others at FusionPharm to communicate with various third parties concerning matters
 that are the subject of or relevant to this investigation, such as FusionPharm customers,
 vendors, and personnel at the transfer agent.
        131. Following the May 16, 2014 execution of the search warrant on
 FusionPharm’s premises, your affiant was made aware that corporate counsel for
 Fusion Pharm and counsel for Dittman had reason to believe that records recovered in
 the search, including emails stored on computers seized at FusionPharm’s premises,
 could contain attorney-client privileged communications between attorneys representing
 FusionPharm and FusionPharm employees, agents and others acting on its behalf.
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Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 47 of 52
 Additionally, during a cursory review of digital files residing on the seized computers,
 your affiant saw emails that involved communications with persons understood to be
 attorneys representing FusionPharm and FusionPharm personnel, although it was not
 clear from this cursory review whether these communications actually constituted
 privileged attorney-client communications. Further, your affiant reviewed records
 produced by CW-3 which included emails that included similar types of attorney
 communications. The discovery of these emails was made known to FusionPharm
 counsel, whereupon counsel made mostly generalized assertions of possible attorney-
 client privileged communications.
          132. In order to address the possibility that items seized during the warranted
 physical search of FusionPharm could contain privileged attorney-client
 communications, a government “filter” or “taint” team, consisting of federal agents and
 a federal prosecutor not assigned to the investigation of this case, has been established
 to filter out any communications that may contain attorney client privileged
 communications and segregate them from your affiant and other agents and
 prosecutors involved in the investigation of this case. The team has been supplied a list
 of attorneys who have represented FusionPharm by FusionPharm counsel and, using
 this list, is currently undertaking to flag and segregate records obtained in the search
 that contain communications involving these attorneys, so that these communications
 are assessed to determine whether they are privileged attorney-client communications
 before being made available to affiant and the rest of the criminal investigative team.
 While it is the plan for the taint team to review the actual content of these segregated
 communications as part of making these privilege determinations, the use of that taint
 team has currently been held in abeyance pending preparation of a privilege log by
 FusionPharm concerning these segregated records, which are being supplied to
 FusionPharm counsel, and pending consideration and discussion of that log between
 prosecutors assigned to this case and FusionPharm counsel. Prosecutors in this case
 have reserved the right to have the taint team review the content of these segregated
 records, at any point in this process, and so it is contemplated that the taint team may,
 at some point, review these segregated communications as part of a privilege review.
         133. As set forth above, your affiant has reason to believe that emails from
 email accounts which are the subject of this search warrant also reside on computers
 that were seized as part of the warranted search of FusionPharm’s premises and that
 some of the same emails may reside both on these computers and on the servers of
 GoDaddy. Because of this, your affiant further has reason to believe that some emails
 that are being sought as part of this search warrant application may contain
 communications between FusionPharm and attorneys representing FusionPharm that
 may be deemed to be privileged communications or, at the very least, subject to a claim
 of privilege by FusionPharm. In order to address possible claims of privilege relating to
 attorney communications contained in emails that are provided to agents pursuant to
 the requested search warrant that is the subject of this application, the same taint team
 using the same procedures will be employed to filter out and segregate for privilege
 review, emails which may contain privileged communications with attorneys
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 representing Fusion Pharm. Any emails segregated as a result of this filtering are
 currently planned to be provided to FusionPharm counsel for its review and use in
 preparation of a privilege log and are will not be reviewed by the taint team until receipt
 of a privilege log from FusionPharm counsel. However, as with segregated
 communications contained in emails seized as part of the warranted search of
 FusionPharm’s premises, it is anticipated that the taint team may eventually review the
 content of these segregated emails as well as part of a privilege review.
                                      CONCLUSION
        134. Based on my training and experience as a Special Agent, all of the
 foregoing constitutes probable cause to believe that:
           a. Dittman and Sears have committed wire fraud and securities fraud
              through, among other things, the dissemination of falsified quarterly and
              annual Financial Disclosures and press releases (“the pump”) in order to
              increase and/or sustain the price of the common stock of FusionPharm,
              thereby allowing them to make millions of dollars when dumping their
              company’s stock in the secondary OTC market (“the dump”); and
                                           s/ Kate E. Funk
                                           Kate E. Funk, Special Agent
                                           Federal Bureau of Investigation
                                           ___________________________________________
                                           __________________________________
                                                                           _________
                                                                                  _____
                                                                                     _ _
                                           UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE
                                                                  E JJUDGE
                                                                      UDGE
                                                                         E
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Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 49 of 52
                                    EXHIBIT A
                    Promissory Note Conversions to Common Stock
 February 5, 2013     Bayside       Bayside sold its note to five investors for
                                    $250,000: This provided each of the five new
                                    investors to convert the debt at $.40/share (as
                                    opposed to the $.01/share in the original
                                    agreement).
 March 14, 2013       Bayside       The five investors above converted portions of
                                    their debt into 200,000 shares.
 March 29, 2013       Meadpoint     Converted $4,750 of debt into 475,000 shares of
                                    common stock. Sears signed the request to
                                    convert on behalf of Meadpoint. Meadpoint
                                    transferred these shares to its Alpine Securities
                                    account on May 2, 2013.
 August 15, 2013      Meadpoint     Converted $5,000 of debt into 500,000 shares of
                                    common stock. Sears signed the request on
                                    behalf of Meadpoint. Meadpoint transferred
                                    these shares to its Alpine Securities account on
                                    September 3, 2013.
 August 30, 2013      Meadpoint     Converted $15,000 of debt into 1,500,000 shares
                                    of common stock. Meadpoint. Sears signed the
                                    requests on behalf of Meadpoint. Meadpoint
                                    transferred all 1,500,000 shares to three people:
                                    (1) Individual RS (500,000 shares); (2) Individual
                                    ST (500,000 shares); and (3) Individual MT
                                    (500,000 shares).
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Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 50 of 52
 January 30, 2014   Bayside      Three investors from the February 5 note
                                 purchase converted portions of their debt into
                                 120,687 shares.
 February 18, 2014 Meadpoint     Converted $6,000 of debt into 600,000 shares of
                                 common stock. Meadpoint transferred these
                                 shares to its Alpine Securities account in
                                 February 2014.
 April 17, 2014     Meadpoint    Converted $9,000 of debt into 900,000 shares of
                                 common stock. Meadpoint transferred these
                                 shares to its Alpine Securities account on April
                                 22, 2014.
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Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 51 of 52
                                                                EXHIBIT B
                    Conversions of FusionPharm Preferred Shares to Common Stock
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Case 1:14-sw-05988-MEH Document 1 Filed 11/28/14 USDC Colorado Page 52 of 52
 April 24, 2012   Robert Dittman       R. Dittman converted 4,750 preferred shares
                                       to 475,000 shares of common stock. He had
                                       170,730 preferred shares remaining. Dittman
                                       immediately transferred 475,000 shares to
                                       four investors.
 March 27,        Scott Dittman        Scott Dittman converted 20,000 shares of his
 2013                                  preferred stock (held in his single person LLC
                                       Salt Investments, LLC) to 2,000,000 shares of
                                       common stock. He has 1,280,000 shares of
                                       preferred stock remaining.
                                        47